Machining.Blog® is a weekly blog focused on manufacturing career development. It features blog articles on the fundamentals of manufacturing for aspiring machinists. Our goal is to create an interest in manufacturing in the USA. Our writer Matthew Schowalter has worked in manufacturing for 24 years, and he covers the topics that matter to someone starting their career in manufacturing.

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“The soft skills the machinist uses are the unseen tools in their box and can directly impact the success or failure of a dreamed after machining career.”

3D Printed Clock

I have designed and built a 3D printed clock that has over two dozen printed parts in it. My aspirations for doing this started when I bought mechanical watch movements and disassembled them to see how they work. The clock that I printed was inspired by a mechanical watch movement, but it is scaled up in size by six times.

The research, development, engineering, and manufacturing took thousands of hours to complete and was considered a hobby of mine. In my career, I was a journeyman tool and die maker, so I made components and fit and assembled them, so this project to me was very similar to tool and die making.

In the picture below, it is a 3D printed mainspring. It was printed out of PLA material, and it lasted for about thirty uses before it failed. I plan on researching different materials that I could make future springs with and testing them on the clock.  

The clock has a few areas that I can adjust the speed of the escape wheel. I have a fine adjustment screw on the fork that is used as a contact point for the escape wheel. The best that I was able to get the clock was it was off 2 seconds in a five-minute study.

The mainspring and clock face

The seconds hand, escape wheel and pallet fork.

The mainspring barrel gear teeth, and center wheel.

Printing a new escape wheel on a raft.

3D Printed Mechanical Clock Video

3D Printed Mechanical Clock Video

Endmills

Endmills